Sydney blooms under the shadow of siege deaths

ALL day they came and queued to pay their respects and to add to the ocean of flowers spilling across Martin Place, less than a block from the site of Monday's bloody café siege.

After depositing their bouquets, many of them stood in silent contemplation.

As news emerged of the heroic behaviour of two hostages who died inside the Lindt Chocolat Café in central Sydney early yesterday, residents mourned their passing - and mourned for their usually carefree city.

"You see this stuff on TV all the time, but I never thought it would happen in our own back yard," said Eddy Habkouk.

Lindt Chocolate Cafe manager Tori Johnson was killed during the siege, with unconfirmed reports suggesting he attempted to wrestle the gun from Man Haron Monis.

Tori Johnson, the 34-year-old café manager, reportedly died after trying to grab the weapon of Man Haron Monis, who had walked into Lindt 16 hours earlier, produced a sawn-off shotgun and taken 17 staff and customers hostage.

An Iranian-Australian self-styled cleric, Monis reportedly fell asleep at about 2am, prompting seven of his captives to flee to safety. He then woke up, and - according to unconfirmed reports - began shooting.

As Mr Johnson tried to wrestle the gun from him, he was shot dead.

Floral tributes are being placed near the Lindt Chocolate café in central Sydney's Martin Place

As police Swat teams then stormed the building, Katrina Dawson, a barrister, shielded her pregnant colleague, Julia Taylor - and died in the crossfire.

Monis, 50, also died at the scene, felled by police, while three female hostages were treated for gunshot wounds in hospital yesterday. All were in a stable condition.

Mr Johnson was a well-regarded and popular manager who had worked at a string of Sydney restaurants. Steve Loane, the chief executive of Lindt Australia, described him as "a great ambassador for our company".

Mr Johnson's parents released a statement saying they were "so proud of our beautiful boy Tori", who would live "forever in our memories".

Katrina Dawson, 38, a barrister with three children, killed protecting a pregnant colleague

An investigation will determine whether a bullet from Monis's gun or a police firearm killed Ms Dawson, a mother of three children under 10.

The 38-year-old, who liked to pop into Lindt for a hot chocolate, was described by the New South Wales Bar Association yesterday as "one of our best and brightest".

Friends remembered her as a warm, caring person, while her school and university said she had been an outstanding scholar.

Her family and that of her husband, Paul Smith, also a lawyer, said they were "shocked and devastated by the tragic and senseless death of our darling Katrina".

As flags flew at half-mast over government buildings yesterday, it emerged that Monis had forced some of the hostages to upload his smartphone videos to YouTube and telephone news organisations to relay his demands.

A 19-year-old Lindt worker, Jarrod Hoffman, told a commercial radio station: "I have had a shotgun put to my head." Another hostage, Marcia Mikhael, posted on her Facebook page that the gunman "is now threatening to start killing us".

The posts and videos were taken down, and the content of the phone calls was suppressed by media organisations at the request of police, who were negotiating with Monis at the time.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott, one of a series of high-profile visitors to Martin Place yesterday, said people were entitled to question why Monis, a man with "a long history of violent crime, infatuation with extremism and mental instability", had not been on a terrorism watch list.

While the former refugee acted alone, he had been an outspoken critic of the Australian government's "war crimes" in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Recently, he had been charged with involvement in his ex-wife's murder and of sexually assaulting multiple women. Mr Abbott questioned why he was on bail and "at large in the community".

Man Monis, also known as Sheik Haron leaves the Downing Centre Local Court in central Sydney in 2010.

Monis's former lawyer, Manny Conditsis, described him as "a damaged goods individual that has done something quite outrageous".

His ideology was "so powerful that it clouds his common sense and objectiveness".

At a memorial service yesterday, the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney, Anthony Fisher, told the congregation that Sydney's heart had been "broken by the deaths of two innocent hostages".

He added: "Hell has touched us. Only history will tell how much December 16 2014 will affect our attitudes, behaviour, lifestyle in this city."

As darkness fell, the queue of people waiting to lay flowers and write in condolence books snaked down Martin Place. Mr Habkouk had travelled for 45 minutes by train to reach the city. "I just felt like I needed to do this," he said.

Nicola Collier, a graphic designer from Leicester who moved to Sydney seven years ago, was one of thousands of people evacuated from office buildings on Monday. "It could have happened to any of us."